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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Within the span of a
generation, innovation and entrepreneurship have emerged as two of
the most vital forces in the economy and in society. This Research
Agenda highlights new insights and approaches to guide future
thinking, research and policy in the area. To accomplish this, the
editors have brought together a group of accomplished scholars
spanning economics, management, public policy and finance. Drawing
on the experiences and insights of leading scholars this Research
Agenda covers a broad array of rich and promising topics, including
entrepreneurial ecosystems, finance and the role of universities.
Focusing on the intersection and overlap between the two
disciplines, the Research Agenda begins by establishing the
theoretical basis between the two topics, before exploring impact,
context, academic entrepreneurship, start-ups, policy and corporate
governance. The book concludes with three provocative chapters:
Friederike Welter highlighting the power of words and images,
Sameeksha Desai discussing the role of artificial intelligence and
Mark Casson presenting a case for radical change to how
entrepreneurship is studied. Presenting the most salient findings
and themes in current literature, A Research Agenda for
Entrepreneurship and Innovation is essential for researchers in
innovation, as well as policy makers at both the local and national
levels influenced by the increasing importance of entrepreneurship
and innovation.
German economic performance has astonished the world. At the turn
of the century, Germany had been written off as the sick man of
Europe. No more. Even as most of its European neighbors and OECD
trading partners have struggled in the face of a turbulent global
economy, the German economy has thrived. How does Germany do it?
What is the secret? In The Seven Secrets of Germany, authors David
Audretsch and Erik Lehmann answer these very questions. This book
reveals, explains, and analyzes seven key aspects of Germany, its
economy, and its society that have provided the nation with
considerable buoyance in an era of global turbulence. These seven
features range from the key and strategic role played by small
firms to world leadership in its skilled and trained labor force,
an ability to harness global opportunities through leveraging local
resources, public infrastructure, the capacity to deal with change
and confront challenges in a flexible manner, and the emergence of
a remarkably positive identity and image. The Seven Secrets of
Germany have insulated the country from long-term economic
deterioration and enabled it to take advantage of the opportunities
afforded from globalization rather than succumbing as a victim to
globalization. This insights can be instructive to other countries
and refute the defeatist view that globalization leads to an
inevitable deterioration of the standard of living, quality of
life, and degree of economic prosperity.
The analysis of corporate governance in small and medium-sized
firms has been a much-neglected aspect of study in the field of
corporate governance. This essential research review provides an
authoritative overview of research in this topical field by
successfully linking classical papers on corporate governance to
the specific aspects in SMEs. The purpose of this book is not only
to provide a review of the literature on governance in SMEs, but
also from other social sciences and management perspectives. This
title will be of great interest not only to lecturers and students
interested in corporate governance but also to managers and policy
makers.
Technology transfer-the process of sharing and disseminating
knowledge, skills, scientific discoveries, production methods, and
other innovations among universities, government agencies, private
firms, and other institutions-is one of the major challenges of
societies operating in the global economy. This volume offers
state-of-the-art insights on the dynamics of technology transfer,
emerging from the annual meeting of the Technology Transfer Society
in 2011 in Augsburg, Germany. It showcases theoretical and
empirical analyses from participants across the technology transfer
spectrum, representing academic, educational, policymaking, and
commercial perspectives. The volume features case studies of
industries and institutions in Europe, the United States, and
Australasia, explored through a variety of methodological
approaches, and providing unique contributions to our understanding
of how and why technology transfer is shaped and affected by
different institutional settings, with implications for policy and
business decision making.
This book celebrates the contributions of David B. Audretsch,
Distinguished Professor at the School of Public and Environment
Affairs (SPEA) at Indiana University (USA), co-founder and
co-editor of Small Business Economics, and former Director of the
Entrepreneurship, Growth and Public Policy Group at the erstwhile
Max Planck Institute of Economics (Jena, Germany). For his
pioneering work, which explores the links between entrepreneurship,
government policy, innovation, economic development, and global
competitiveness, he has received the 2001 Global Award for
Entrepreneurship Research from the Swedish Foundation for Small
Business Research and the 2011 Schumpeter Prize from the University
of Wuppertal (Germany). This volume features original contributions
from over 50 leading scholars to map, analyze and evaluate the
impact of Audretsch's research on a broad spectrum of research
fields, ranging from economics to entrepreneurship and geography.
The development and evolution of key ideas which have significantly
shaped theory and future research across these fields are also
explored.
This book aims to contribute to the understanding and evaluation of
the processes through which innovative knowledge is created and
translated to entrepreneurial technological advantage in higher
education institutions. The chapters included in this edited volume
discuss new trends related to the impact of policies on innovation
and entrepreneurial activity in universities, by providing a
variety of insights from both an individual and an institutional
perspective and with reference to a number of different contexts
and units of analysis. The integration of both qualitative and
quantitative approaches, as well as the multidisciplinary approach
that characterizes this volume makes it possible to provide an
in-depth understanding of today's dynamics. The volume will be of
relevance to scholars, students and researchers interested in
Entrepreneurship, Higher Education, Economics and Technology
Management. The chapters in this book were originally published as
a special issue of the journal Industry & Innovation.
Public policy spanning a broad range of contexts, ranging from the
European Union, to states, cities and local communities around the
globe, has turned to entrepreneurship to provide the engine for
economic growth, competitiveness in globally linked markets, and
jobs. This book explains why entrepreneurship has emerged as a bona
fide instrument of growth policy. The knowledge spillover theory of
entrepreneurship suggests that entrepreneurship provides a crucial
mechanism in the process of economic growth by serving as a conduit
for knowledge spillovers. Investments in new knowledge and ideas
may not automatically spill over and result in commercialization,
as has typically been assumed in models of economic growth. Rather,
the existence of what is introduced as the knowledge filter impedes
the spillover and commercialization of investments in new ideas and
knowledge. By penetrating the knowledge filter and facilitating the
spillover of knowledge that might otherwise not be commercialized,
entrepreneurship provides the missing link to economic growth. This
new focus of entrepreneurship as a conduit transmitting the
spillover of knowledge generates a series of theoretical
propositions, involving not just the impact of entrepreneurship on
economic performance and growth, but also the very nature of
entrepreneurship. The theoretical propositions range from positing
that entrepreneurial opportunities are not exogenously given but
rather endogenously and systematically created by investments in
new knowledge and ideas, to the importance of geographic proximity
between entrepreneurial activity and knowledge sources, the impact
of location on entrepreneurial performance, and the new roles for
board, managers and modes of finance in entrepreneurial firms
accessing and absorbing knowledge spillovers. These propositions
are subjected to systematic econometric scrutiny and verification
using both aggregate data to analyze the links between
entrepreneurship and growth, as well as firm-level data to analyze
the impact of knowledge spillover on entrepreneurial location,
performance, boards, managers and mode of finance. The resulting
empirical evidence supports the knowledge spillover of
entrepreneurship not only by linking entrepreneurship to economic
growth and performance, but also by identifying how the
organization and strategy of entrepreneurial firms are influenced
by the need to access, absorb and commercialize external knowledge
spillovers. The book concludes that the new millennium may not be
so much about the process of Joseph Schumpeter's creative
destruction, where entrepreneurial startups displace and ultimately
drive incumbent company's out of business, but rather characterized
by creative construction. Globalization and its concomitant
outsourcing and offshoring is the source of the "destruction",
especially in terms of lower skilled jobs. By contrast, in the 21st
century global economy, entrepreneurship is constructive by
commercializing investments in knowledge and ideas that might never
have been commercialized but ultimately result in growth, global
competitiveness and employment. Thus, the emergence of
entrepreneurship policy can be interpreted as the attempt to
generate entrepreneurial based economic growth by creating an
entrepreneurial economy.
This book celebrates the contributions of David B. Audretsch,
Distinguished Professor at the School of Public and Environment
Affairs (SPEA) at Indiana University (USA), co-founder and
co-editor of Small Business Economics, and former Director of the
Entrepreneurship, Growth and Public Policy Group at the erstwhile
Max Planck Institute of Economics (Jena, Germany). For his
pioneering work, which explores the links between entrepreneurship,
government policy, innovation, economic development, and global
competitiveness, he has received the 2001 Global Award for
Entrepreneurship Research from the Swedish Foundation for Small
Business Research and the 2011 Schumpeter Prize from the University
of Wuppertal (Germany). This volume features original contributions
from over 50 leading scholars to map, analyze and evaluate the
impact of Audretsch's research on a broad spectrum of research
fields, ranging from economics to entrepreneurship and geography.
The development and evolution of key ideas which have significantly
shaped theory and future research across these fields are also
explored.
Technology transfer-the process of sharing and disseminating
knowledge, skills, scientific discoveries, production methods, and
other innovations among universities, government agencies, private
firms, and other institutions-is one of the major challenges of
societies operating in the global economy. This volume offers
state-of-the-art insights on the dynamics of technology transfer,
emerging from the annual meeting of the Technology Transfer Society
in 2011 in Augsburg, Germany. It showcases theoretical and
empirical analyses from participants across the technology transfer
spectrum, representing academic, educational, policymaking, and
commercial perspectives. The volume features case studies of
industries and institutions in Europe, the United States, and
Australasia, explored through a variety of methodological
approaches, and providing unique contributions to our understanding
of how and why technology transfer is shaped and affected by
different institutional settings, with implications for policy and
business decision making.
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. Within the span of a
generation, innovation and entrepreneurship have emerged as two of
the most vital forces in the economy and in society. This Research
Agenda highlights new insights and approaches to guide future
thinking, research and policy in the area. To accomplish this, the
editors have brought together a group of accomplished scholars
spanning economics, management, public policy and finance. Drawing
on the experiences and insights of leading scholars this Research
Agenda covers a broad array of rich and promising topics, including
entrepreneurial ecosystems, finance and the role of universities.
Focusing on the intersection and overlap between the two
disciplines, the Research Agenda begins by establishing the
theoretical basis between the two topics, before exploring impact,
context, academic entrepreneurship, start-ups, policy and corporate
governance. The book concludes with three provocative chapters:
Friederike Welter highlighting the power of words and images,
Sameeksha Desai discussing the role of artificial intelligence and
Mark Casson presenting a case for radical change to how
entrepreneurship is studied. Presenting the most salient findings
and themes in current literature, A Research Agenda for
Entrepreneurship and Innovation is essential for researchers in
innovation, as well as policy makers at both the local and national
levels influenced by the increasing importance of entrepreneurship
and innovation.
Dieser Buchtitel ist Teil des Digitalisierungsprojekts Springer
Book Archives mit Publikationen, die seit den Anfangen des Verlags
von 1842 erschienen sind. Der Verlag stellt mit diesem Archiv
Quellen fur die historische wie auch die disziplingeschichtliche
Forschung zur Verfugung, die jeweils im historischen Kontext
betrachtet werden mussen. Dieser Titel erschien in der Zeit vor
1945 und wird daher in seiner zeittypischen politisch-ideologischen
Ausrichtung vom Verlag nicht beworben.
Was macht Frauen fur Banken, die zuruck an die Spitze wollen, so
interessant? Frauen haben Geld und verstehen, weil sie immer besser
ausgebildet werden, auch zunehmend mehr von Wirtschaft. Fur beide
Beobachtungen liefert dieser Band in drei Kapiteln eine Fulle von
Beweisen, die fur sich sprechen. Es ist ein Buch, das einen
doppelten Zweck erfullt. Es zeigt den Frauen als aufsteigender
neuer Macht auf den Finanzmarkten ihre Chancen und Moglichkeiten
auf. Den gebeutelten Banken wird demonstriert, dass sie, was das
Auffinden neuer Zielgruppen anbelangt, gar nicht so erfinderisch
sein und so weit gehen mussen. Es lohnt sich fur sie, vor der
Haustur eine in der Vergangenheit wenig beachtete, aber in jeder
Beziehung uber viel Potenzial verfugende neue Kundengruppe starker
ins Visier zu nehmen."
Die Sandstrahlgeblase, welche in den beiden letzten Jahrzehnten des
vorigen Jahrhunderts in Deutschland mehr und mehr eingefuhrt
wurden, fanden zunachst nur zum Verzieren, Atzen und Mattmachen von
Glas Verwendung. Bald zeigte sich aber, dass sie auch zu anderen
Zwecken vorteilhaft verwendet werden konnteu. Infolgedessen
eroberten sie sich immer neue Arbeitsgebiete in den verschiedensten
Gewerben. Die technischen Vorzuge der Sandstrahlgeblase sind jetzt
allgemein anerkannt, es hat sich aber auch herausgestellt, dass sie
fur die Ge sundheit der daran tatigen Arbeiter recht bedenklich
sein konnen. Ihre Wirkungsweise und die Art ihrer Verwendung bringt
es mit sich, dass beim Arbeiten damit grosse Mengen von Staub
entstehen, deren Einwirkung sich die Arbeiter ohne weiteres gar
nicht entziehen kon nen. Der Staub besteht zum grossen Teil aus
feinsten Trummern des Sandes, also aus reiner kristallinischer
Kieselsaure. Er gehort daher zu den gefahrlichen Staubarten. Die
schlimmen Wirkungen dieses Staubes werden durch die Abhandlung von
Dr. med. Ern e s tin e Muller, "Pneumoconiose bei Arbeitern eines
Sandgeblases," Zentral blatt fur Gewerbehygiene 1928, S. 148,
eindringlich vor die Augen gefuhrt. Die Gewerbeaufsichtsbeamten
haben auch schon bald nach der Einfuhrung der Sandstrahlgeblase die
Gefahr erkannt, denen die Ar beiter dabei ausgesetzt sind, und
nachdrucklich darauf hingewirkt, dass der Staub beseitigt wird oder
die Arbeiter in anderer Weise ge schutzt wurden."
Corporate Governance in IPO Firms encompasses theories and concepts
analyzing, judging and describing financial decisions in
entrepreneurial firms and draws on positive and normative aspects
of entrepreneurship. In a positive way, this monograph describes
these phenomena in aspects of governance issues in IPO firms, and
why and how governance structures shape the behavior, the
boundaries and the performance of these firms. In a normative way,
this monograph offers concepts on how institutions and mechanisms
should be designed and work to optimize a respective goal or
performance associated with the IPO of an entrepreneurial firm.
Corporate governance mechanisms in IPO firms differ from the
traditional corporate governance issues in several ways. First, an
IPO confronts the founder-manager of the firm with the trade-off
between obtaining additional resources to sustain future growth and
profits and maintaining total control of the company. Secondly,
this constitutes a trade-off for investors between the expected
returns of a risky investment and the agency costs associated with
moral hazard and adverse selection effects caused by imperfect and
asymmetric information. Thirdly, analyzing IPOs offers insights
into how these agency costs are priced by investors at the point in
time that these costs occur. Fourthly, of difference is which
governance mechanisms are at work at this initial stage of a
company's lifecycle. Finally, analyzing corporate governance issues
in IPO's offers additional insights on the macro level and reveals
country-specific differences.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1910 Edition.
Corporate Governance and Entrepreneurial Firms takes an in-depth
look at corporate governance mechanisms in entrepreneurial firms,
and offers an explanation on how and why they differ from those
mechanisms in large and publicly traded corporations. While
questions of corporate governance are mainly discussed and analyzed
within the context of large and public companies, there is only
scarce evidence on corporate governance issues arising in small- or
medium-sized firms. To this end the motivation for this article is
to direct attention to corporate governance in entrepreneurial
firms. Corporate Governance and Entrepreneurial Firms develops a
conceptual framework that may help to analyze corporate governance
mechanisms in entrepreneurial firms, and serve as a leading example
that compares the entrepreneurial firm with other types of firms.
By capturing the mechanisms of corporate governance within an
interval ranging from purely market mechanisms over contractual
agreements to strong hierarchical elements, and integrating
microeconomic and financial theories with the management
perspective, the authors provide a unique viewpoint and summary,
identifying several ideas to stimulate future research on this
important and growing topic.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
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